Interview with Ryan David Jahn
The Dispatcher
Debbie - Ryan first off thank you so much for agreeing to participate in B&N.com’s General Fiction forum as we feature your latest novel The Dispatcher as our featured read. I have to be honest and say that this was a most gripping read and not an easy one to take, but one that I am really glad that I read.
Where did you get the premise for The Dispatcher?
Ryan - In 2009, after working in TV for five years, I found myself unemployed and in need of steady income. The LAPD was looking for police dispatchers. I mailed in an application and, a week later, received a postcard with the location, date and time of an aptitude test on it, and, of course, drove down to take it. When I arrived, about twenty minutes early, there was a line around the block. I don’t know how many applications the LAPD received, but about five hundred people showed up for the test. As I stood in line I started thinking about the job of a dispatcher, and imagined receiving a phone call from my wife. In the brief mental movie, our apartment was being burgled while I was at work, and she called 911. I happened to answer the call, and was aware of all the sounds in the apartment, of the fear in her voice, and of the fact that I was miles away and unable to do anything. The story of The Dispatcher is very different, but it began with that brief fantasy and the emotions it evoked.
Is there a certain audience you write for or do you write to please yourself?
I primarily write to please myself. That is, if I don’t like the story and the characters I have no reason to finish a piece of work. That said, if I only wrote for myself there would be no reason to edit, and I spend a lot of time editing—both for story and character, and for flow. I want the reading experience to be a smooth one. So, I’d say I write the first draft for myself and subsequent drafts for an audience, but an audience that likes the same things I like.
According to your bio you left school at 16 and after several odd jobs you joined the service. Does your past feature into your wanting to write fiction and does it make it’s way into your writing?
I’ve been writing since I was twelve, so I think I was born with whatever it is in me that made me want to be a writer. But my past does make its way into my fiction. Usually, in small moments of reality—Kat’s first memory in Good Neighbors, in which she is lying in bed watching dust motes dance in a beam of light, is in fact my first memory; Ian Hunt flicking a wad of belly button lint at his daughter is something I saw a friend do, and it stuck with me, as it just seemed so human; and I’ve had a few characters with military backgrounds.
Are you a reader and if so who are some of your favorite authors or genres?
Right now I’m on a bit of a biography kick, but some of my favorite crime/thriller/suspense books are Savage Night by Jim Thompson, Cujo by Stephen King (which is not among his best work, but I read it when I was twelve and it really made in impact), Black Friday by David Goodis, and Donald Westlake’s Parker novels.
What are you working on now?
I’m working on a violent father-son story called The Algebra of Blood. I’m always afraid to say too much, as talking about a work tends to make it shrivel, so I’ll leave it at that. I’m very excited about it, though.
Do you write full time?
For now, I am lucky enough to do so, yes.
On your website the event on July 20th in the UK shows up. How was that? Are the UK audiences different in any way from the US ones?
Harrogate was great fun. I always like crime/thriller conventions. They’re the one place I’m likely to be recognized, for one, and I get to see many of my writer friends who I normally only exchange emails with. The primary difference between US and UK audiences for me is that more people in UK audiences tend to have read my stuff. I have four books out there, while I only have two out here. But both tend to be very enthusiastic and friendly. I think those who write crime fiction have a relationship with their readers that other types of writers don’t—science fiction excepted—as crime writers tend also to be fans.
Okay now for something personal. What would your perfect vacation be?
A week in bed with the woman I love.
Ryan thanks again and I can’t wait for the discussion to start Monday August 7, 2012
Fans of B&N.com and Ryan’s please check here for updates, reading schedule and other relevant information about the August featured novel.
Fans of B&N.com and Ryan’s please check here for updates, reading schedule and other relevant information about the August featured novel.
My review of The Dispatcher
The Dispatcher
Ryan David Jahn
The Penguin Group
ISBN13:9780143120704
351 pages
Ian Hunt is a shell of the man he once was his life changed for the worse seven years ago when his daughter Maggie was kidnapped from her bedroom, she was seven years old and the fallout didn’t stop with the kidnapping. Working as a police dispatcher Ian receives a call that will once again change his life. What would you do if you got a call from your dead daughter, Ian will have to answer that question and face the consequences that go with it.
Maggie Hunt has lived the last seven years of her life in a Nightmare World, the people who took her keep her locked away, scared and often in harms way until one day they leave the door unlocked and she escapes, makes a crucial 911 call before she is recaptured and the nightmare starts all over again. But now she has something that she hasn’t had in a long time, she has hope. Hope that her daddy will rescue her, hope that he will not rest until she is in the loving arms of the family that she was ripped away from.
What would you do?
Mr. Jahn gives us a thriller that’s as good as I’ve ever read, a plot of a world that no parent, in fact no one wants to get up close and personal with. His dialogue will take us into the seedier side of life and death with no holds barred, where his narrative is brutally beautiful and his scenes come alive to his readers. His characters will shine from his slightly noir-ish Ian to his sadistic villains and to the magic of Maggie and all the others as well as he clearly and succinctly lets us into their hearts and their minds. He takes us on a journey where the outcome is always just out of our reach, but reach we must.
If you like the writing of Michael Connelly, Andrew Gross or Nelson DeMill, you will love Ryan David Jahn, if you need that edge of your seat, nail biting drama where the bloodier and guttier the better you’ll love this novel. And then just keep asking yourself, What would you do?
I loved this book more than I can ever say. It's actually one of those books, that the longer it's been since I've read it, the more I'm loving it.
ReplyDeleteI'm really excited to hear the premise of the next book.
Great interview.
Thanks Ryan, hope you'll be joining in
Deletedeb